65 Mo. 89 | Mo. | 1877
This was a suit instituted before a justice of the peace in Cass county, on two promissory notes, one for the sum of $20.00, and the other for $25.00. There was a trial before the justice and judgment for the defendant, from which plaintiff appealed to the Circuit Court, where, upon a trial de novo, judgment was again rendered for defendant, from which plaintiff, after an ineffectual motion for a new trial, has appealed to this court. On the .trial it was agreed by the parties that the evidence would show that the notes sued on were executed in part payment for a Wheeler & Wilson sewing machine, sold by J. W. Moore as the agent of A. Sumner, the payee in- said note; that said Sumner at the date of said notes was the general agent of plaintiff, and since the maturity of the same, transferred them to plaintiff; that the whole amount of the other notes given for said machine has been paid in cash by defendant, and a portion thereof was paid to Moore; that at the time of the sale of said machine, it was agreed between defendant and said Moore, that said defendant should board said Moore and his wife, who was helping him, and his team, which was being used in the selling of machines, at a stipulated price for board then agreed upon, and that the amount of such board should be received in payment on said machine, and credited on the notes given for the same; that such agreement was one of the inducements to defendant to purchase the machine; that said Moore agreed to have the
I. Upon the above facts the case was submitted to the court without the intervention of a jury. The refusal of the court to give the following instruction on behalf of the plaintiffs, is the error complained of: “ If the court believes from the evidence that the defendant executed the notes read and sued on in this case, then the court should find for the plaintiff the amount which appears to be due thereon, notwithstanding the court may also believe that the defendant may have made with the agent who sold the machine for which said notes were given, the cotemporaneous parol agreement mentioned in the statement of the evidence, and may have furnished board to said agent, pursuant to said agreement of value equivalent to the sum so due on said notes.” The facts in the case show that Moore, the agent who sold the machine in question had authority to sell, and that he was to receive, as compensation for his services, twenty-one dollars for each machine sold. Under this authority he had a right only to sell, and in exercising this right in the absence of particular instructions, might sell according to
II. Although an agent (known to be such) is ordinarily entitled to receive payment of any debt due to his principal in the course of his agency, yet he does . - . not thereby acquire any right to receive pay-' ment except in the ordinary modes of business. He has no right to change the security of his principal for his debt, or to make himself the debtor of the principal for the like amount in lieu of the person who owes the debt, without the consent of the principal to that effect. If an agent has -authority to receive for his principal a debt due from a third person to him, and the agent owes a like amount, or a greater, he has no right to substitute himself
Reversed.